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      • Of greater political consequence was Anne’s intimate relationship with her childhood friend Sarah Jennings Churchill, wife of John Churchill (later 1st duke of Marlborough). The beautiful, intelligent Sarah became Anne’s lady of the bedchamber and soon had the princess in her power.
      www.britannica.com › biography › Anne-queen-of-Great-Britain-and-Ireland
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  2. Dec 4, 2018 · Yes. Lady Sarah and her family returned to England on the afternoon of Queen Anne's death on August 1, 1714. It was rumored that Anne had asked for them to come back. With Anne's passing, the Tories fell from power, and the Whigs, including Sarah's husband, became the ruling majority again.

  3. Anne Hyde. Religion. Anglicanism. Signature. Anne (6 February 1665 – 1 August 1714) [a] was Queen of Great Britain and Ireland following the ratification of the Acts of Union on 1 May 1707, which merged the kingdoms of Scotland and England. Before this, she was Queen of England, Scotland, and Ireland from 8 March 1702.

    • 8 March 1702 – 1 August 1714
    • Anne Hyde
  4. Feb 23, 2019 · Queen Anne was drawn to Sarah Churchill's "vibrancy and exuberance." Anne met Sarah Jennings, a lady-in-waiting to her stepmother Mary of Modena, when they were young girls in the...

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  5. Anne (born February 6, 1665, London, England—died August 1, 1714, London) was the queen of Great Britain and Ireland from 1702 to 1714 who was the last Stuart monarch. She wished to rule independently, but her intellectual limitations and chronic ill health caused her to rely heavily on her ministers, who directed England ’s efforts against ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. Feb 8, 2019 · Queen Anne, the last of the Stuart monarchs, reigned from 1702 until her death aged 49 in 1714. Unlike Queen Elizabeth I, Henry VIII and Charles I, little is known about her in the modern day...

  7. www.historic-uk.com › HistoryofBritain › Queen-AnneQueen Anne - Historic UK

    Sarah was Mrs Freeman and Anne, Mrs Morley. They had been very close friends for many years before Anne became queen. Lady Clarendon, who was Anne’s first Lady of the Bedchamber, said Sarah ‘looked like a mad women and talked like a scholar’. Later, Sarah was to be supplanted in Anne’s affections by a cousin of hers, Abigail Hill.

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